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House Committee Releases Epstein Case Files

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House Committee Releases Epstein Case Files: A Labor-HHS-Education appropriations bill being introduced to cut by 13.7B includes a reduction of CDC, education and workforce programs, and provides NIH with a zero base. A civil war is on the verge of breaking out just because Congress is arguing about federal funding.

Key point-

  1. Epstein Files released by House Oversight Committee.
  1. Continue Push toward Full Transparency
  1. Victim Testimony and Subpoenas widen the Investigation.
  1. Budget Cuts are recommended by Appropriations Panel.

 

Why It Matters

 

 

 

Brief summary- where we stand at this point.

Subcommittee LHHS Subcommittee role (quick primer)

 

Agency changes and top-line numbers.

Particular program level effects (headline items).

The most significant program changes identified by committee materials and reporting are listed below – these are the programs that are likely to be of the most interest to constituencies and stakeholders.

Education

Health (HHS / CDC / NIH / Public Health).

Department of Labor: Huge proportional reductions – Reporting indicates a cut of about $4B (28-30) to a variety of job-training, worker-protection, and worker-safety programs (the specific list of programs is in the committee text and in Democratic documents). This would strike workforce innovation grants, apprenticeship supports, and part of the enforcement resources.

Other notable items

What this means in practice

  1. When passed as proposed: Significant cuts to education and workforce supports would fall on states/localities or require program cuts; public-health surveillance and prevention capacity may be decreased in certain locations; research (NIH) would be largely intact, but some specific research or public health activities might be curtailed.
  2. However, – this is an early House bill: The Senate will normally introduce its own bills (which are usually less draconian on internal programs), and any final FY funding will have to be negotiated by conference or continuing resolution. The House Democrats have cut a lot that is politically framed and will be challenged on the floor and in conference. Expect changes.
  3. Time and politics: Since this bill was pushed through committees on party lines this means that it will pass the floor only if the GOP remains unified. Democrats will make the cuts a message in policy debate and appropriation battles. Opposition is already being organized by interest groups (education associations, public-health organizations, unions).

Sources (documentation and reporting)

 

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Conclusion

The FY2026 bill sponsored by the House Appropriations Subcommittee will signify a significant change in priorities on domestic spending, reducing more than 13.7 billion in Labor, Health and Education funds.

Although NIH research has mostly been spared, the CDC, Department of Education, and Department of Labor are experiencing severe cuts that may transform national public health capacity, school funding, and workforce development.

It has been hypogian in the sense that republicans have been selling as a cost cutting mechanism and democrats have proceeded to say that there are some adverse effects that are attendant to it and it has a disastrous effect to the lives of the needy.

So the final budget result will be a matter of negotiation, but the House version prepares the groundwork of a bitter appropriations battle.

Also read- Jerry nadler will retire in 2026

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